Nice kit. CCIE?
AJ
Nah, CCNP. Not really sure if I want to complete the CCIE. So much work, so specialized and kind of a dead end road. Being a Data Center Architect I push to be more well rounded, so Cisco/Juniper/Microsoft/VMware/Linux/Security/Citrix certs overall. I like to hold certs in the advanced area but not the expert area. Gives me time to touch more technology and explore different ideas.
Just curious:
I understand having the racks to test stuff with, but what do you actually use all of that for in the house? I have one little linksys router, and it does pretty good at keeping up with 6 computers, 2 360s, and 2 phones. What am I missing. I wondered this when I was taking my networking classes too, but since we were mostly learning software, I haven't even used all of that rack equipment.
So the stuff in the white rack comprises what runs the house. In it is a Cisco 4507R-E which runs my network. Linksys routers like you mentioned work great but their hardware is very low grade/low engineered. So 1 Gbe on a Linksys $50 dollar router != 1Gbe on the 4507R-E. There's a bell curve on how Network flow works and on lower end gear buffers and memory often times limit the rate of transfer. So for me, I need pure 1 Gbe all the time, never limited by how much I'm transferring. This is because of what else runs on the 4500.
The servers at the bottom of the rack are HP DL385's running dual 6 core AMD chips and 64 GB of ram. They each have anywhere between 20-50 VM's running at a given time. These VM's can vary based on what I've got going in my head at any given time. Sometimes I'm building an armada of tiny Linux boxes to see how I can affect NetFlow or to see if I can DDoS something on a low scale. Sometimes I'm running 24 GB VM DB boxes so I can gauge what real world environments look like.
Outside of testing/projects I run three AD domains each with two DCs. My root Domain and then a home domain and a lab domain. The Home domain runs VM's for thin clients around the house as well as any services around the house. Stuff like MS SharePoint with workspaces for myself, the wife and friends. I also run stuff like iFolder, an awesome program that is basically DropBox only you can run it on your own server. Dropbox's limited space got me pissed.
I've got three SANs totaling 20 TB of space. This space holds all Arcade related stuff, my MP3 collection, Games collection, Work stuff and Movies/TV shows. When our son was born I wanted to give myself and my wife the ability to instantly run any cartoon on any TV in the house. So she can go to the TV in the Kitchen and click it on and boom, there's every episode of sesame street ever. Or Dora the explorer or whatever. So that was kind of my inspiration for some of the build out.
So by no means do I need half the stuff I have but I've enjoyed living in the IT world so far in my life and my passion for it outside of work has reflected back into my work and it's visibility only helps to bring about new challenges and exciting paths forward in my career.